(I think you must be getting sufficiently expert to answer rather than
ask questions.)

It's not clear which line all.qvto:74 is, (and it might be off by one
anyway). But assuming it's the T1 step, I would go in with Java debugger
and see how the construcytion of T1 differs in your call to a normal
call of T1 as an uncomposed transformation. You can then copy whatever
code enabled T1 to work. If it's the T2 step then save the intermediate
and try to use it in a T2-only context and again compare construction
contexts.

You may also want to prune the ResourceSet since leaving temporaries
around from T1 could corrupt the behaviour of T2.

Regards

Ed Willink

On 03/02/2012 08:28, Wilbert Alberts wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I created two transformations T1 and T2 both having the signature:
>
> T(in inModel : mm_pgwb, out outModel : mm_pgwb)
>
> I'd like to create a transformation that results in the composition of
> T1 and T2. Therefore I came up with something that looks like:
>
> transformation all(in inModel : mm_pgwb, out outModel : mm_pgwb)
>
> access T1(in inModel : mm_pgwb, out outModel : mm_pgwb)
> access T2(in inModel : mm_pgwb, out outModel : mm_pgwb);
>
> main() {
> var m1 : mm_pgwb = outModel.createEmptyModel().oclAsType(mm_pgwb);
>
> var t1:= new T1(inModel, m1).transform();
> var t2:= new T2(m1, outModel).transform();
> }
>
> When I try to execute this code, eclipse/qvt complains with this message:
>
> org.eclipse.m2m.internal.qvt.oml.evaluator.QvtRuntimeException:
> Undefined model passed to transformation
> at all::main(all.qvto:74)
>
> I assume that m1 is an empty model without any root element and that
> is the reason for the error. Two questions: is my assumption right and
> if so, how can I add a root element to a Model entity?
>
> Greetings,
> Wilbert.
>